Welcome to the latest entry in our Bonus Round series, wherein we tell you all about the new Android games of the day that we couldn’t get to during our regular news rounds. Consider this a quick update for the dedicated gamers who can’t wait for our bi-weekly roundups, and don’t want to wade through a whole day’s worth of news just to get their pixelated fix. Today we’ve got a space puzzler, a space arcade game, a space RPG…

Edit: As some of you have stated, donating corrected voicemails on a per-voicemail basis was previously possible, and those messages would then be analyzed by a person. This new feature is a toggle that shares all of your voicemails with Google, which are then analyzed by a machine, not people. So, this will presumably result in much faster improvements, and hopefully much better accuracy, by using a much wider data set.

Anyone who was hoping for big changes to the Google Keyboard’s functionality is going to be disappointed with L. The performance and features are almost identical, but it looks a lot different. Don’t freak out yet – the old themes are still there.

The default look for Android L’s keyboard is “Material.” It uses borderless keys and a slate gray/pale green theme. I actually quite like it, but I’ve heard from a lot of you who feel very differently.

Part of the 5000 new APIs and many small enhancements to be introduced with Android L that were revealed in a heavily packed slide at Google I/O is rotation lock on phones. That nifty Quick Setting toggle is currently only available on tablets in KitKat. On our stock Android phones, we have had to suffer the annoyance of delving into settings or using some third-party widget to lock the screen’s orientation.

The hunt is on. Or it will be right after the main Google I/O keynote is over. If you’re a registered attendee of the conference and you have some free time between sessions, the yearly location-based I/O treasure hunt will provide you with enough trivia and challenges to keep you entertained.

This year, you will be looking for Alex, the Android dog, who left a trail of NFC tags all over Moscone Center, starting with a booth on Floor 3.

Do you even wrist-type, bro? You totally could with Minuum… I mean, not that you’d necessarily want to, but you’ll have the option. The maker of the compact Android keyboard has announced it’s working on a version of Minuum for round Android Wear devices like the Moto 360. There’s even a GIF demo.

Minuum works by crunching all three rows of the standard QWERTY down to one line (an arc along the bottom here).

I don’t need to tell you this is a good deal – we’ve seen it pop up before and it sold out pretty fast. Today you can get the Nexus 7 in either 16GB or 32GB sizes for $ 170 and $ 130 respectively, but it’s US-only.

This is a refurbished unit, so there is only a limited factory warranty. Otherwise it’s the same device you’d buy for about $ 100 more from Google Play.

Yesterday, we dropped a leaked image and render of Volantis, an alleged upcoming Nexus tablet built by HTC. We also dropped specification info and pricing – and that’s really what this weekend’s poll is about.

This new Nexus tablet isn’t messing around – it will sport an NVIDIA Tegra K1 64-bit processor utilizing the company’s proprietary Denver CPU core, a very powerful desktop-architecture GPU, 2GB of RAM, an 8.9″ display with 2048×1440 resolution (that’s 4:3 aspect ratio), aluminum construction, and will likely launch with one of the biggest Android releases (the “L” release) to date.

Here at Android Police, we’re no strangers to digging around in Google’s code and finding surprising stuff inside. Apparently some members of the CyanogenMod team did the same, and found a hidden feature in KitKat: Heads Up notifications. These floating notifications are meant to be used in full-screen apps or Immersive Mode, but for whatever reason, they aren’t switched on in AOSP code. (Perhaps they’re intended for the next major Android release.) You can probably guess what happens next.